When something that shouldn’t make financial sense suddenly does, you experience a certain kind of surprise. Recently, a Michel Foucault trading card sold for $400 on eBay. It wasn’t a signed jersey wrapped in cardstock, a holographic Pokémon, or a rookie athlete. Take a moment to let that land. A card with the face of a French philosopher best known for his writings on prisons, power, and the nature of knowledge sold for $400 from a buyer who was presumably very enthusiastic and had a very particular bookshelf at home.
There is currently a resale market for theory trading cards. Three years ago, that statement would have sounded ridiculous. It still sounds a bit ridiculous. And yet here we are, witnessing real bids from real people spending real money on eBay listings for cards featuring scholars, theorists, and intellectuals. There’s a feeling that something subtly important occurred in a corner of collector culture that most people weren’t paying enough attention to.

In general, the trading card business has been in an odd period of growth for many years. Driven by YouTube pack-opening videos, pandemic boredom, and a true nostalgia economy, what had begun as an obsession with sports memorabilia started to bleed into unexpected categories. Music cards, horror cards, and entertainment cards. Slowly at first, then all at once, each new niche finds its footing. The next logical, if somewhat bizarre, chapter in that story seems to be theory cards.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that these aren’t being purchased as jokes. The Foucault sale represents a collector base that takes the category seriously, constructing sets, evaluating condition, and investigating provenance in the same manner as a buyer of vintage baseball cards. It is not an anomaly resulting from irony. It’s genuinely unclear if the underlying value will hold or eventually correct, but the demand seems genuine enough to support triple-digit price tags, at least for the time being.
The significance of eBay’s involvement in all of this is greater than it may appear. The platform has spent years developing infrastructure tailored to trading cards, such as price guides, integrated condition grading, and specialized search filters. Originally designed for sports cards, that equipment now subtly acts as the framework for all subsequent niches. The fact that theory cards ended up in a market that was already set up to accept them likely accelerated their legitimacy more quickly than anyone could have predicted.
This has a parallel that is worth thinking about. Skeptics referred to the 2020 and 2021 sports card boom as a bubble. A portion of it was. However, a sizable portion of the market settled on something sturdy, creating a long-lasting collector base. Earlier in the same arc, theory cards are still figuring out their floor and which names have enduring significance. At $400, Foucault offers at least one solution. Surprisingly, there is now a market mechanism to determine whether the prices of a Derrida or a Judith Butler card are comparable.
Observing this from the outside, it’s remarkable how easily academic figures are mapped onto the language of sports card collecting. First editions are rookies. Holo variants become rare prints. Graded condition matters just as much. The vocabulary transfers almost perfectly, which might explain why the crossover happened at all — the infrastructure of desire was already built, waiting for new objects to organize around.
It’s possible this stays niche. It’s equally possible that in five years, someone pays $4,000 for a graded Foucault card in near-mint condition, and none of us will be entirely surprised. The market has a way of making the strange feel obvious, eventually.
